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- 12 Oct 2024
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Thanks for the feedback.I'd prefer a flat roof to that.
Will you be up on your ladder every six months when you're 93?
These are valleys...
View attachment 394678
This is absolutely no problem, as a leaf or dead bird landing anywhere on that lot will get flushed away by the rain.
I don't know what the name is for what you're proposing. I'd suggest "potential disaster". Anything falling into it will sit there, indefinitely.
I've seen it done though, but it always looks weird, and is definitely risky.
My builder says he has done it before. The valley gutter starts off wider at the back of the roof and then narrows towards a hopper where the gutter is. He steps the gutter structure down for using lead. He said I'd actually be able to walk in the valley gutter as it would be wide enough and any crap would be flushed out by rain owing to the fall. This is a bungalow as well so no really dangerous scaling of heights. I could drag any leaves out with a brush or some such from a step ladder a few times a year.
My house already has four or five valleys on it as it is a hipped roof with different out riggers coming off it. Not had any problems with them, although they are normal roof valleys, some with GRP closed valley style and some with traditional open ones with lead and mortar. This proposed one would of course be different.
The flat roofed extension looks ugly and the trouble with keeping a flat roof (which was done badly two years ago by a bad excuse for a roofer) is that it will cost just as much to recover it by a competent person as it will cost for my builder to just put a hipped roof on it. Truss system will be £650, plus roofing felt, tiles, guttering, labour... probably will come in at no more than £5K.
Since noseall says this isn't a box gutter, I gather we can say it is a type of valley gutter that is more shallow than usual, requiring different design features.
